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Once you have all your regular weekly tasks allocated to particular times you can do
same with your repetitive monthly tasks. Get those down as well. They have to be done, so they need to be down in your diary.
Make sure you set aside a regular time each week for
unexpected but essential. In other words build in some scheduled slack time, some recovery time. It may be that one week dealing with your mail takes longer than usual. It must be done, but you overrun your allocated time slot. That’s OK. Use your scheduled slack time. Another week it may be that your progress report takes longer than usual. Never mind. You have your scheduled slack time to make use of.
If you don’t set aside this extra time you are almost certain to be scrabbling around for time in amongst all
other jobs that have come in on an irregular basis. But of course if you find that one of your scheduled tasks, dealing with your mail for example, regularly overflows into this extra time slot then you must allocate more time to that task in
first place. The recovery time slot should never be constantly filled by
same overflowing task each week.
Once these regular tasks are scheduled in you are free to accept all
other demands on your time –
discussions,
meetings,
seminars,
requests for special reports,
demands of your staff, whatever it is – without worrying whether
routine but essential tasks will get done or not. You will no longer have that worry in
background. Your available time will be under your control again.
Don’t underestimate
stress-reducing effect of being master of your own time.

Arthur Cooper is a writer and publisher. For more of his articles go to: http://www.arthurcooper.com/ For articles ebooks and courses go to: http://www.barrel-publishing.com/